Hydrodynamics of Janus particles self-assembled as vesicles
ORAL
Abstract
Janus particles have been widely used for self-assembly of mesoscopic structures with specific functions. Previously we constructed a model for self-assembly of Janus particles to form bilayer membranes under a hydrophobic potential (SIAM J. Multiscale Modeling, 2020). In this work we illustrate the hydrodynamics of a vesicle made of such bilayer membranes. We use boundary integral equations to examine the hydrodynamics under various conditions: a quiescent flow, a planar shear flow, a linear elongational flow, and a Poiseuille flow. From the simulation results we find strong similarities to the vesicle hydrodynamics of a permeable lipid bilayer membrane under these flowing conditions such as tank-treading motion, an asymmetric slipper, and membrane ruptures. Moreover, two Janus-particle leaflets exhibit intermonolayer slip, similar to those between two lipid monolayers, and we calculate the friction coefficients.
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Publication: Simulation of Multiscale Hydrophobic Lipid Dynamics via Efficient Integral Equation Methods, Szu-Pei P. Fu, Rolf Ryham, Andreas Klöckner, Matt Wala, Shidong Jiang, and Yuan-Nan Young, Multiscale Model. Simul. 18-1 (2020), pp. 79-103<br><br>Two-Dimensional Vesicle Hydrodynamics from Hydrophobic Attraction Potential, Szu-Pei Fu, Bryan Quaife, Rolf Ryham, Yuan-Nan Young, arXiv:2110.01555
Presenters
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Rolf J Ryham
Fordham University
Authors
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Rolf J Ryham
Fordham University
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Bryan Quaife
Florida State University
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Yuan-Nan Young
New Jersey Inst of Tech
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Szu-Pei Fu
Fordham University